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Alphabetical [« »] friends 8 friendship 7 friendships 1 from 357 fronesis 1 front 1 fruendi 1 | Frequency [« »] 408 esse 404 not 402 was 357 from 355 est 331 see 330 quod | Marcus Tullius Cicero Academica Concordances from |
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1 Pre | could not be readily got from existing books; next, to 2 Pre | me to depart too widely from the MSS. If any apology 3 Pre | say that I have done so from a conviction that the very 4 Pre | added very many references from my own reading, and from 5 Pre | from my own reading, and from other sources. Wherever 6 Pre | pointed out the authority from whom it was taken. I need 7 Pre | exhaustive edition either from my own or some more competent 8 Pre | publish them than to withhold from students help they so greatly 9 Pre | of errors and omissions from any who are interested in 10 Int, I | literature was inherited from his father, who, being of 11 Int, I | part of his time in study.1 From him was probably derived 12 Int, I | more lasting impressions from the teaching of Phaedrus. 13 Int, I | eminent Greeks who fled from Athens on the approach of 14 Int, I | for Epicureanism was swept from his mind, and he surrendered 15 Int, I | can be little doubt that from the great rhetorician Molo, 16 Int, I | it is probable, however, from a mention of [vi] him in 17 Int, I | to him.~The philosopher from whose lessons Cicero certainly 18 Int, I | known either personally. ~From the year 77 to the year 19 Int, I | owed much to philosophy from the first he repeatedly 20 Int, I | insists; [viii] and we know from his letters that it was 21 Int, I | well as with the Greeks who from time to time came to Rome 22 Int, I | The year 62 released him from the consulship and enabled 23 Int, I | to prevent a single leaf from being lost.... Every day 24 Int, I | Theopompus40.~The years from 59—57 B.C. were years in 25 Int, I | occupation. Soon after his return from exile, in the year 56, he 26 Int, I | lasting, if we may judge from the affectionate mention 27 Int, I | Roman Epicurean Lucretius, from destroying the house in 28 Int, I | there49. On the journey from Athens to his province, 29 Int, I | mind, and on his way home from Cilicia he spoke of conferring 30 Int, I | there for a few days56. From thence they went to Athens, 31 Int, I | study as might be obtained from the actual philosophical 32 Int, I | time had he been divorced from philosophy68. He was entitled 33 Int, I | little difficulty in showing from a minute survey of his works, 34 Int, I | and voluminous writer." From political partizanship, 35 Int, II | not merely as they came from the hands of their founders, 36 Int, II | Madvig even is not free from this error, as will be seen 37 Int, II | this error, as will be seen from my notes on several passages 38 Int, II | to distinguish the true from the false, and the determination 39 Int, II | withhold absolute assent from all doctrines, while giving 40 Int, II | temperament also, apart from his experience as an orator, 41 Int, II | toleration, and repelled him from the fury of dogmatism. He 42 Int, II | series of English thinkers from Milton to Mill, to show 43 Int, II | stir a foot's breadth away from Chrysippus86. The Academic 44 Int, II | regard him as a deserter from the Old Academy to the New. 45 Int, II | then, stand quite apart from his dialectic. In the sphere 46 Int, II | Peripatetic schools to cease from giving an uncertain sound ( 47 Int, II | craftsman of words, stole them from the Old Academy. This is 48 Int, II | doubt that he caught it from Antiochus who, in stealing 49 Int, II | Aristotle. This partly arose from the actual adoption by the 50 Int, III | speculation. The conclusion drawn from the charge is also quite 51 Int, III | equal value, for it is only from them that we get any full 52 Int, III | confess to be taken wholly from Greek sources. Indeed at 53 Int, III | anything good could come from the school of Epicurus, 54 Int, III | patriotic wish to remove from the literature of his country 55 Int, III | regard any fresh importation from Greece much in the spirit 56 Int, IV | afterwards suppressed145. From the same place he wrote 57 Int, IV | convincing149. It is clear from the letters to Atticus that 58 Int, IV | Academica. This would be clear from the mention in the Academica 59 Int, IV | which the public characters from whom the books took their 60 Int, IV | Cicero at Tusculum was one from Varro166.~On the 23rd July, 61 Int, IV | the receipt of a letter from Atticus, strongly urging 62 Int, IV | failure to fulfil his promise. From this it is evident that 63 Int, IV | friendship between the two. Apart from these causes for grumbling, 64 Int, IV | detailed account of the reasons from which it proceeded185. In 65 Int, IV | reception it would meet with from Varro. He wrote thus to 66 Int, IV | precautions to prevent it from getting into circulation 67 Int, IV | Varro's hands, as we learn from a letter, in which Cicero 68 Int, IV | was still undecided199. From this fact we may conclude 69 Int, IV | Academia, but we are certain from the letters to Atticus that 70 Int, IV | of the book, as gathered from Cicero's letters to Atticus. 71 Int, IV | unnecessary to do so may be seen from the astounding theories 72 Int, IV | loves to honour. The Catulus from whom the lost dialogue was 73 Int, IV | detain us long. It is clear from the Lucullus208 that he 74 Int, IV | opinions he had received from his father. Cicero would, 75 Int, IV | compelled to exclude himself from the conversation209. The 76 Int, IV | hope, or cause to swerve from his own course219. His influence, 77 Int, IV | fortunate in his death221.~Apart from Cicero's general agreement 78 Int, IV | edition of the Academica from circulation, he affixed 79 Int, IV | Lucullus in the second. From the passages above quoted, 80 Int, IV | passages above quoted, and from our knowledge of Cicero' 81 Int, IV | the patronage it received from so famous a man as the younger 82 Int, IV | outline the speech of Catulus from indications offered by the 83 Int, IV | It is easy to gather from the De Oratore, in which 84 Int, IV | He defends the Greeks from the attacks of Crassus232. 85 Int, IV | general culture, it is only from the Academica that we learn 86 Int, IV | repeatedly asserts that from no other schools can the 87 Int, IV | gained his information [l] from books and especially from 88 Int, IV | from books and especially from the writings of Clitomachus. 89 Int, IV | now proceed to draw out from the references in the Lucullus 90 Int, IV | was mainly drawn by Cicero from the writings of Clitomachus.~ 91 Int, IV | We are thus relieved from the necessity of forcing 92 Int, IV | the word commoveris261, from which Krische infers that 93 Int, IV | philosophy of the orator from whom it was named. To any 94 Int, IV | Hortensius were, doubtless, drawn from the published works and 95 Int, IV | this speech was to justify from the history of philosophy 96 Int, IV(273)| What these were will appear from my notes on the Lucullus.~ 97 Int, IV | philosopher may have borrowed from Zeno. The rôle given to 98 Int, IV | to keep it perfectly free from anachronisms. Diodotus is 99 Int, IV | acknowledged by Cicero to be drawn from the works of Antiochus286. 100 Int, IV | passages already quoted from the letters. He seems at 101 Int, IV | explicitly stated to be derived from a discussion in which he 102 Int, IV | shown to be not far distant from the actual time of composition293. 103 Int, IV | Atticus299. On Cicero's return from exile, he and Varro remained 104 Int, IV | artificial; very different from the letters Cicero addressed 105 Int, IV(300)| They are the only letters from Cicero to Varro preserved 106 Int, IV | with tolerable accuracy from Augustine, who quotes considerably 107 Int, IV | who quotes considerably from, the work of Varro De Philosophia302. 108 Int, IV | he selected this school from, among the 288 philosophies 109 Int, IV | currency to Müller, who, from Stoic phrases in the De 110 Int, IV | was Stoic in Varro came from Antiochus303.~The exact 111 Int, IV | entire mistake, which arose from a wrong view of Nonius' 112 Int, IV | quotations, which are always from the second edition, and 113 Not, 1 | I. p. 51. A M. Varrone: from M. Varro's house news came. 114 Not, 1 | villa: the prep is absent from the MSS., but Wesenberg ( 115 Not, 1 | the separation of satis from longo by the word eum is 116 Not, 1 | slight variation, however, from res to artibus is such as 117 Not, 1 | will remove all suspicion from the text. Verbis quoque 118 Not, 1 | Met. A, 2. Many editors from Lamb. to Halm and Baiter 119 Not, 1 | marking a rapid transition from one subject to another ( 120 Not, 1 | subject to another (here from physics to ethics) like 121 Not, 1 | change of subject in passing from quisquam to haec ipsa, both 122 Not, 1 | that this is wrong is clear from the fact that in D.F. II. 123 Not, 1 | numerous passages produced from Cic. by Madv. (Em. 111), 124 Not, 1 | enim above, is a departure from Cic.'s rule which is to 125 Not, 1 | read, erit must be supplied from it to go with disserendum, 126 Not, 1 | alteration of a single letter from the MSS. reading? The meaning 127 Not, 1 | him to have been quoting from memory. Sedem: so the best 128 Not, 1 | divinarum humanarumque rerum: from the frequent references 129 Not, 1 | verbis: Manut. reads rebus from 26. Varro's researches into 130 Not, 1 | probas, which is too far from the MSS. to please me. The 131 Not, 1 | Academy. The reading illam is from Madv. (Em. 115), and is 132 Not, 1 | a fine sentiment to come from a conservative like Cic. 133 Not, 1 | and libros may be supplied from libris above, so in Ad Att. 134 Not, 1 | libros has to be supplied from the preceding letter, cf. 135 Not, 1 | s Philonia is improbable from its non-appearance elsewhere, 136 Not, 1 | ed. Victoriana of 1536. From Orelli, Klotz, whose text 137 Not, 1 | Sane istud: Halm istuc from G. Inquit: for the late 138 Not, 1 | therefore that omnes was added from an involuntary desire to 139 Not, 1 | teaching of his master, from him sprang two schools which 140 Not, 1 | pp. 112—116 [I dissent from his view of Aristotle's 141 Not, 1 | valere: valere is absent from MSS., and is inserted by 142 Not, 1 | ceteris" this is evidently from Plato Apol. p. 21, as to 143 Not, 1 | account for the branching off from Plato of the later schools. 144 Not, 1 | s pupils; so Varro says (from Antiochus) in Aug. De Civ. 145 Not, 1 | 21, which is taken direct from Antiochus, this appears, 146 Not, 1 | pirata, etc., which came down from antiquity, did not make 147 Not, 1 | insert disserendi, probably from the line above, Lipsius 148 Not, 1 | Halm inserts me before this from his one MS. G, evidently 149 Not, 1 | time, so by Varro himself (from Antiochus) in Aug. De Civ. 150 Not, 1 | while so far is Aristotle from founding his system on the 151 Not, 1 | strongly apparent in Polemo, from whom it passed into Stoic 152 Not, 1 | division is a development from the βιος τελειος of Aristotle. 153 Not, 1 | pulcher the false derivation from πολυχροος may have aided 154 Not, 1 | J.C. Scaliger derived it from πολυ χειρ (Curtius' Grundz 155 Not, 1 | quasi marks a translation from the Greek, as frequently, 156 Not, 1 | philosophy. Erat: note the change from oratio obliqua to recta, 157 Not, 1 | necessary, as may be seen from Topica 80, causa certis 158 Not, 1 | friend) proposed mundana from T.D. V. 108, Varro, however, 159 Not, 1 | Antiochus, who, as will be seen from Augustine XIX. 1, 3, included 160 Not, 1 | dogmatists, cut away the ground from action and duty, see II. 161 Not, 1 | s doctrine is to be got from Schwegler, Handbook, pp 162 Not, 1 | efficit is not distinct from, but equivalent to vis, 163 Not, 1 | perhaps translates here from Tim. 52 B, φαμεν αναγκαιον 164 Not, 1 | bars the old derivations from secare, and sequi. Quanto 165 Not, 1 | ita tantus quantus, etc., from the words with which they 166 Not, 1 | four elements may be gained from the section of Stob. Phys., 167 Not, 1 | υποκειμενη ‛υλη of Aristotle, from which our word subject-matter 168 Not, 1 | πανδεχες is also quoted from Okellus in Stob. I. 20, 169 Not, 1 | least learn Plato's opinions from Tim. 35 A sq. It is notable 170 Not, 1 | whose ideas may be gathered from R. and P. 288, 9, and especially 171 Not, 1 | 288, 9, and especially from M. Saint Hilaire's explanation 172 Not, 1 | ultro is a dittographia from utro. The meaning would 173 Not, 1 | ed.) all come ultimately from Stoic sources, even if they 174 Not, 1 | 32, 75, 86, 115, 116, all from Stoic sources. Effectum 175 Not, 1 | esse mundum: Halm adds unum from his favourite MS. (G). Natura 176 Not, 1 | used verbal explanations, from which they drew proofs. 177 Not, 1 | tale quale esset: probably from Plato's Tim. 35 A thus translated 178 Not, 1 | nom seem to exclude Plato from the supposed old Academico-Peripatetic 179 Not, 1 | may sift out the certain from the uncertain. Res eas ... 180 Not, 1 | true information can be got from sensation, whereas, as we 181 Not, 1 | the subject is changing from moment to moment; the expression 182 Not, 1 | importance to Plato may be seen from the Politicus and Sophistes, 183 Not, 1 | Sophistes, to Aristotle from the passages quoted in R. 184 Not, 1 | quite a different thing from those definitiones nominum 185 Not, 1 | exposition: the departures from the old Academico-Peripatetic 186 Not, 1 | into two parts, an impulse from without, and a succeeding 187 Not, 1 | certainly does not receive from the one passage Halm quotes, 188 Not, 1 | Theophrastus, he was called so from his style (cf. loquendi 189 Not, 1 | he departed very widely from the Aristotelian ethics; 190 Not, 1 | Diligenter ... tuebantur: far from true as it stands, Polemo 191 Not, 1 | for the split of Stoicism from Academicism by the rivalry 192 Not, 1 | be clearly distinguished from the later sense found in 193 Not, 1 | arose, said the Stoics, from a false judgment about some 194 Not, 1 | that Arist. derived mind from this fifth element, though 195 Not, 1 | He always guards himself from assigning a material origin 196 Not, 1 | essential fact, which is clear from Stob. I. 41, 33, that the 197 Not, 1 | habit of deriving the mind from αιθηρ, which is the very 198 Not, 1 | notion that νους or ψυχη came from αιθηρ was also fostered 199 Not, 1 | great hold on his mind One from the Phaedrus 245 C is translated 200 Not, 1 | αεικινητος ψυχη of Plato came from the αεικινητος αιθηρ of 201 Not, 1 | the first thing generated from the αποιος ‛υλη; from it 202 Not, 1 | generated from the αποιος ‛υλη; from it comes air, from air water, 203 Not, 1 | υλη; from it comes air, from air water, from water earth ( 204 Not, 1 | comes air, from air water, from water earth (Diog. Laert. 205 Not, 1 | 137) The fire is λογικον, from it comes the ‛ηγεμονικον 206 Not, 1 | thought. These notions came from Heraclitus who was a great 207 Not, 1 | things perceived followed from old physical principles 208 Not, 1 | πασχειν ‛υπ' αλληλων, qu. from Arist. De Gen. et Corr. 209 Not, 1 | requires no corroboration from without. Comprehendibile: 210 Not, 1 | sensation and the thing from which it proceeds are often 211 Not, 1 | of Arist. which, induced from experience and incapable 212 Not, 1 | the edd. (1) the change from oratio obliqua to recta, 213 Not, 1 | passages might be quoted from Cic.~§44. Non pertinacia 214 Not, 1 | see 16. Socrates was far from being a sceptic, as Cic. 215 Not, 1 | Praep. Evan. XIV. c. 4 (from Numenius) of Arcesilas, 216 Not, 2 | distinguishing eggs one from another, which had been 217 Not, 2 | esse which Augustine quotes from the Academica Posteriora ( 218 Not, 2 | fishes were seen leaping from the water was brought up 219 Not, 2 | argument hostile to the senses from the consideration of the 220 Not, 2 | when he changed the scene from Bauli to the Lucrine lake, 221 Not, 2 | Puteoli was not visible from Varro's villa on the Lucrine.~ 222 Not, 2 | second ed. some comparison from building operations to illustrate 223 Not, 2 | former may be supported from I. 6, which he does not 224 Not, 2 | probabile, as may be seen from the words probabiliter posse 225 Not, 2 | a nature as to be taken from a stock which Cic. kept 226 Not, 2 | Hortensius. I give, partly from Krische, the scattered indications 227 Not, 2 | which are to be gathered from the bishop's works. In Aug. 228 Not, 2 | of Cic. must have ended. From this portion of the first 229 Not, 2 | Academicism was excusable from the necessities of the age 230 Not, 2 | a much smaller departure from the first edition. Allusions 231 Not, 2 | necessary here to prove from Aug. the points of agreement 232 Not, 2 | divergences which appear from other sources. These are 233 Not, 2 | cultivated man, was absent from Rome on public service too 234 Not, 2 | philosopher, having learned much from Antiochus and read much 235 Not, 2 | inquiry (7). My school is free from the fetters of dogma; other 236 Not, 2 | 24. Caruit: "was cut off from;" carere comes from a root 237 Not, 2 | off from;" carere comes from a root skar meaning to divide, 238 Not, 2 | excepted his own officers from its operation. Prooemio, 239 Not, 2 | to the sea, called ξυστος from its polished floor and pillars. 240 Not, 2 | Tyrius: scarcely known except from this passage. Clitomachum: 241 Not, 2 | Petrilius, a derivative from the word for four, be read? 242 Not, 2 | note the change of prep. "from Philo's lips," "from his 243 Not, 2 | prep. "from Philo's lips," "from his copy." De and ex are 244 Not, 2 | to that utter scepticism from which he was fleeing. We 245 Not, 2 | thinking the departure from the MSS. too great, keeps 246 Not, 2 | actum as a dittographia (!) from 15 nihilne explicatum, and 247 Not, 2 | known, if known at all, from these two passages only.~§ 248 Not, 2 | meaning of this may be seen from D.F. II. 107, III. 1. It 249 Not, 2 | υπαρχοντος (proceeding from an actually existent thing) 250 Not, 2 | a ground quite different from the καταληπτικη φαντασια, 251 Not, 2 | renegade. (2) is evident from the Academica and from Sextus 252 Not, 2 | evident from the Academica and from Sextus as quoted above. 253 Not, 2 | usually does. It would seem from that passage that he defined 254 Not, 2 | correct (12). I may add that from the mention of Philo's ethical 255 Not, 2 | perception is possible, is seen from moral action. Who would 256 Not, 2 | quote no parallel to this from the Greek texts. Expletam 257 Not, 2 | 250. Quam: for the change from plural to singular (perceptio 258 Not, 2 | Lucretius often passes rapidly from the one use to the other; 259 Not, 2 | παντα δε αδηλα (quoted as from Carneades), also 54 of this 260 Not, 2 | aside (περισπαν, περιελκειν) from the one which is the immediate 261 Not, 2 | signo for nota, merely from love of variety. The in 262 Not, 2 | appearance to the thing from which it proceeds, then 263 Not, 2 | impact of the sensation from without, not the assent 264 Not, 2 | the change of construction from infin. to subj. after necesse 265 Not, 2 | which are indistinguishable from false cannot be partly perceptions, 266 Not, 2 | which are indistinguishable from false, cannot be partly 267 Not, 2 | sensation which proceeds from a reality, has a form which 268 Not, 2 | might have if it proceeded from an unreality (41). To prove 269 Not, 2 | those which are deduced from sensations; after which 270 Not, 2 | clearly the sensation (visum) from the thing which causes it. 271 Not, 2 | the sensations cannot tell from which of the two things 272 Not, 2 | two sensations which come from the two dissimilar things, 273 Not, 2 | υποκειμενον (i.e. the thing from which the appearance proceeds) 274 Not, 2 | thinks, impossible, change from recta oratio to obliqua. 275 Not, 2 | known and distinguished from others (43). For the purposes 276 Not, 2 | those visa which proceed from real things and give a correct 277 Not, 2 | representation of the things, from those which either are mere 278 Not, 2 | to be indistinguishable from them? (48)~§46. Circumfusa 279 Not, 2 | be false, (1) it may come from one really existent thing, 280 Not, 2 | Quaerunt: a slight anacoluthon from dicatis above. Quonam modo ... 281 Not, 2 | difficulty distinguishable from the true, or finally to 282 Not, 2 | utterly indistinguishable from the true (this meaning of 283 Not, 2 | mind as those which proceed from realities. Ut si qui: the 284 Not, 2 | difficulty distinguishable from the true? The rest exactly 285 Not, 2 | assent. When we have wakened from the dream, we make light 286 Not, 2 | cannot be distinguished from the other; see n. on 40. 287 Not, 2 | sensations which proceed from or are caused by the things, 288 Not, 2 | Servilii were distinguished from one another by their friends, 289 Not, 2 | breeders of fowls could tell from the appearance of an egg 290 Not, 2 | able to distinguish eggs from one another or not. Another 291 Not, 2 | our rule will prevent us from making any positive assertion 292 Not, 2 | on I. 6, 8. Constitit: from consto, not from consisto 293 Not, 2 | Constitit: from consto, not from consisto cf. 63 qui tibi 294 Not, 2 | Antiochus, and may perhaps from a passage of Augustine, 295 Not, 2 | fecerat, ut: different from the constr. treated by Madv. 296 Not, 2 | this passage wrongly as from the Hortensius. He imitates 297 Not, 2 | They were probably named from their inventor like Vitelliana, 298 Not, 2 | carefully distinguished from the use of utrum ... ne ... 299 Not, 2 | called ‛ο μεταθεμενος) from Stoicism to Epicureanism 300 Not, 2 | 166—7. A vero: "coming from a reality," cf. 41, n. Is 301 Not, 2 | man ought to keep clear from opinion. Arcesilas agreed 302 Not, 2 | Quintae classis: a metaphor from the Roman military order. 303 Not, 2 | very different statement from the nihil sciri posse by 304 Not, 2 | their great word was παθος. From 143 (permotiones intimas) 305 Not, 2 | n. Tum illum: a change from ille, credo (sc. respondit), 306 Not, 2 | existent," and "is different from what it seems to be"—the 307 Not, 2 | that the inference only from the sensation can be false, 308 Not, 2 | false one indistinguishable from it (83). A man who has mistaken 309 Not, 2 | the senses arguments drawn from Chrysippus himself (87). 310 Not, 2 | confusion of the passage arises from the mania of the copyists 311 Not, 2 | change of person, however, (from dicit to habes) occurs also 312 Not, 2 | left with the slight change from video to cerno, which is 313 Not, 2 | contenderunt). Madv. points out from Plut. De Plac. Phil. II. 314 Not, 2 | φθισει σε το σον μενος. From Diog. IV. 62 we learn that 315 Not, 2 | this too large a departure from the MSS., I read reri, which 316 Not, 2 | credidit. Itera dum, etc.: from the Iliona of Pacuvius; 317 Not, 2 | Video, video te: evidently from a tragedy whose subject 318 Not, 2 | reads incitatus. Halm qu. from Wesenberg Observ. Crit. 319 Not, 2 | of Chrysippus to refrain from answering, will avail you 320 Not, 2 | and I learned Dialectic from Antiochus, the Mentiens 321 Not, 2 | superabundance of negation arising from a sort of anacoluthon, comparing 322 Not, 2 | pronuntiatio, in Gellius XVI. 8 (from Varro) prologium. Aut verum 323 Not, 2 | sophisms as he does verses from the comic writers is untenable. 324 Not, 2 | Poenus: "as might be expected from a Carthaginian;" cf. D.F. 325 Not, 2 | putat. For the sudden change from oratio recta to obliqua 326 Not, 2 | number of exx. of this change from sing. to plural are given 327 Not, 2 | one which prevents a man from expressing any assent or 328 Not, 2 | which does not prevent him from giving an answer to questions, 329 Not, 2 | that the constr. is varied from the subj. to the inf. after 330 Not, 2 | is not needed may be seen from D.F. II. 70. negat Epicurus ( 331 Not, 2 | quotes an exact parallel from Topica 46, and sicut ... 332 Not, 2 | Topica 46, and sicut ... item from N.D. I. 3, noting at the 333 Not, 2 | dogmatic system like yours free from mistakes (114). You wish 334 Not, 2 | common enough to prevent us from being surprised at Cicero' 335 Not, 2 | s teaching, as distinct from that of Carneades. I see 336 Not, 2 | and the examples given from Cic. by Madv. on D.F. II. 337 Not, 2 | divides the subjunctive from the indicative in clauses 338 Not, 2 | must choose one teacher from among the conflicting schools 339 Not, 2 | Stoics and spurn Aristotle from you, while you will not 340 Not, 2 | can exist, say you, apart from the deity. Strato, however, 341 Not, 2 | construction again differs from that of Democritus. I see 342 Not, 2 | they not allow me to differ from them? (126) Not that I deprecate 343 Not, 2 | for moral good results from it (127). Our sapiens will 344 Not, 2 | ante, which probably arose from a marginal variant "vel 345 Not, 2 | exordium of Anaxagoras given from Diog. II. 6 in R. and P. 346 Not, 2 | sound however may be seen from T.D. II. 30 optare hoc quidem 347 Not, 2 | analeptic. Halm departs somewhat from this arrangement. Leniter: 348 Not, 2 | qu. similar combinations from D.F. V. 11, 58. Elatiores: 349 Not, 2 | is just the same change from Pyrrhoni to Xenocrates. 350 Not, 2 | interpretation Antiochus adopted, and from him it is attributed to 351 Not, 2 | stated, is not different from that of Polemo, but it is 352 Not, 2 | published a work different from the Paradoxa, which we possess: 353 Not, 2 | not "concerning," but "from among" the different fines; 354 Not, 2 | is quite a different view from that in 131; yet another 355 Not, 2 | and never stirs a step from Chrysippus. Dialecticians 356 Not, 2 | Plato is almost excluded from the so-called vetus Academia, 357 Not, 2 | to the sea. (The exx. are from Forc.) This passage I believe